Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Opponents Concede That California's Mental Health Measure Likely Will Pass
Governor Gavin Newsom鈥檚 mental health bond measure Proposition 1 continues to hang on to its narrow lead, prompting leaders of the opposition movement to concede likely defeat on Tuesday. The measure, which requires a simple majority to pass, was supported by 50.4% of voters and opposed by 49.6% as of Tuesday afternoon鈥檚 vote update. 鈥淲e almost took down the bear, but it looks like we will fall short. Today, as the principal opponents of Proposition 1, we concede that it is almost certain to pass,鈥 said Californians Against Proposition 1 in a Tuesday morning statement. (Harter, 3/12)
Arkansas will no longer allow drivers to use an 鈥淴鈥 for their gender on driver鈥檚 licenses, state regulators said Tuesday, rolling back a policy that was inclusive to nonbinary people.聽The Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration said the changes are being made to 鈥渟afeguard鈥 state IDs. The agency also announced it will make it more difficult for transgender people to change the gender listed on their ID. (Robertson, 3/12)
The Uvalde, Tex., police chief, who was not present the day a gunman killed 19 students and two teachers at Robb Elementary School, announced his resignation Tuesday morning, five days after an investigator hired by the city defended police officers鈥 response to the shooting in a report that drew fury from many of the victims鈥 families. Police Chief Daniel Rodriguez, who was away on vacation during the 2022 shooting, said he will step down April 6, after 26 years on the force. (Kaur, 3/12)
Six emergency medical districts in Missouri will soon distribute an opioid addiction medication as part of a state-funded pilot program. EMS workers across the state are receiving training on how to give overdose victims a dose of buprenorphine, which manages cravings and withdrawal symptoms, after reviving them from an overdose with the overdose reversal drug naloxone. (Fentem, 3/12)
麻豆女优 Health News: West Virginia City Once Battered By Opioid Overdoses Confronts 鈥楩ourth Wave鈥
From 2006 through 2014, more than 81 million painkiller pills were shipped to this city and surrounding rural Cabell County. The arrival of prescription opioids onto seemingly every block of Huntington, a city of about 46,000 people, augured the first wave of an overdose crisis. Heroin followed, then fentanyl. Residents remember Aug. 15, 2016, as the darkest day because on that afternoon and evening, 28 people overdosed in the city. But Huntington had shouldered collective trauma before. (Sisk, 3/13)
On Sept. 8, 2017, Craig Ridley, an inmate at Florida Department of Corrections鈥 Reception and Medical Center in Lake Butler for nine years, called his sister, Diane Ridley-Gatewood, for one of their regular talks. This time, he told her he was afraid for his life after filing a complaint against a prison guard who threatened him, she recalled. 鈥淐raig, if they start beating you,鈥 she advised him, 鈥測ou need to get into a fetal position so they won鈥檛 hit your internal organs.鈥 Hours later, around 3:20 a.m., two corrections officers hurt 62-year-old Ridley so badly he was paralyzed from the neck down. (Neary, 3/11)
麻豆女优 Health News: Secret Contract Aims To Upend Landmark California Prison Litigation聽
California commissioned an exhaustive study of whether its prisons are providing sufficient mental health care, an effort officials said they could use to try to end a 34-year-old federal lawsuit over how the state treats inmates with mental illness. But corrections officials won鈥檛 disclose basic details of the now-stalled study 鈥 even the cost to taxpayers for two consulting firms and more than two dozen national experts retained to examine the issue in 2023. State lawyers cited attorney-client privilege and ongoing litigation in denying 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 public records requests for the information. Independent legal experts questioned the blanket denials. (Thompson, 3/13)